Assured compelling and hypnotically readable with a twist at the end i guarantee you won t see coming new york times bestselling author lee child t.
Lies tm logan review.
With that criteria in mind lies by t m.
Check out the last time i lied by riley sager and or our house by louise candlish for a few such examples.
This is the first book i ve read by tm logan but i am beginning to realise that i ve been a bit of a numpty and need to move the rest of the author s books up my ever expanding tbr list especially if lies in anything to go by.
Joe s heartbreak and desolation are palpable the tale cunningly exploits the paranoia that springs from fractured trust and although logan fails to fully earn his twisting plot s final turn the ending still packs a punch.
Logan just doesn t quite make the cut.
Joe lynch and his son william are driving home when wills spot his mum s car and begs his dad to stop and see her.
Lies seem to stick to one another like tree sap enticing insects.
I can t believe all the good reviews.
Most of the book are his thoughts hardly any character development.
Frankly it doesn t hold up against the numerous expertly plotted psychological thrillers that have released this year alone.
Four year old william spots his mother s familiar car entering into a below ground parking lot of a hotel in north london while riding in the back seat of his father s car.
Once you get near enough there s no way out.
The main character was just plain stupid.
Logan writes viscerally about the emotional devastation wrought by marital infidelity.
The shocker was that i actually endured endless hours to finish this book.
Logan is a spellbinding twist filled domestic mystery.
This book was about 200 pages too long.